ZeePedia

THE USE OF MACROECONOMIC DATA, AND THE DEFINITION AND ACCOUNTING OF NATIONAL INCOME

<< INTRODUCTION TO MACROECONOMICS (CONTINUED………..):The Monetarist School
THE USE OF MACROECONOMIC DATA, AND THE DEFINITION AND ACCOUNTING OF NATIONAL INCOME (CONTINUED……………..) >>
img
Introduction to Economics ­ECO401
VU
UNIT - 9
Lesson 9.1
THE USE OF MACROECONOMIC DATA, AND THE DEFINITION AND ACCOUNTING OF
NATIONAL INCOME
THE USE OF MACROECONOMIC DATA
As is said: "there are lies, damned lies and statistics." Likewise, macroeconomic statistics are
also susceptible of both manipulation and misinterpretation. In order to ensure that you
understand what a particular number or data representation really means, the following need
to be considered:
i.  Data might be used selectively. Certain information might be excluded: e.g.
inflation as a whole might have increased but food inflation might have fallen.
ii. In graphs, the vertical and horizontal scales used might be such in a way so as to
paint a very dramatic (or totally benign) picture of things.
iii. Values used might be absolute, not proportionate. People might be paying higher
taxes, but as a proportion of income, the same may have fallen, as incomes
might have risen even higher.
iv. Questions of distribution might be ignored. For e.g., while the economy might
have become richer overall, the ownership of the higher wealth might be highly
skewed so that the richer have become richer and poor poorer.
v. Data might be nominal or real. Nominal data is recorded in money terms,
unadjusted for inflation. Real data is nominal data adjusted for changes in prices.
Most macroeconomic data is presented and analyzed in real terms so as to
permit meaningful intertemporal and cross-country comparisons.
vi. Certain time periods might be excluded: e.g. economic growth might be 4.5%
over the 1990-95 timeframe, but only 3.5% over the 1988-97 horizon.
vii. Data might be aggregate, ignoring per capita considerations: e.g. a country's
national income goes up but per capital income goes down due to a bigger
population.
viii. vii also applies in the context of growth rates. So if national income is growing at
5% p.a. but the population at 6% p.a., per capital income would be falling at the
rate of 1% p.a.
THE DEFINITION AND ACCOUNTING OF NATIONAL INCOME
Gross Domestic Product (GDP):
Gross domestic product (GDP) is the value of the total final output produced inside a country,
during a given year. GDP, like all measures of national income, is a flow (as opposed to stock)
figure accruing over the period of one year.
Concept of Flow and Stock:
A flow figure refers to a certain period of time. A stock figure implies a particular point in time
and therefore changes instantaneously. Flows accumulate into stocks. Changes in stocks
equal flows. In accounting terminology, stocks are balance sheet items, while flows are income
statement items.
Ways of Measuring GDP:
There are three equivalent ways of measuring GDP:
i.  The product or value added method which sums the value added by all the
productive entities in the economy;
ii. The expenditure method which sums up the value of all the "final goods"
transactions taking place in the economy;
89
img
Introduction to Economics ­ECO401
VU
iii. And the factor income method which sums up all the incomes earned by all the
factors of production in the economy (rent for land, wages for labour, interest for
capital, and equity returns for entrepreneurship).
The three methods are equivalent. One way to see why this must be so is because in an ex-
post sense, aggregate supply (i) = aggregate demand (ii) = national income (iii).
Value added is the difference between the value of goods produced and the cost of materials
and supplies used in producing them. Value added consists of the wages, interest and profit
components added to the output by a firm.
Final and Intermediate Goods:
Final goods are meant for direct use by the end consumer rather than for further processing.
Intermediate goods are those that are intended for further processing. So an iron rod, if
purchased by a household as a weapon against infiltrating thieves would categorize as a final
good, but if purchased by a firm for use in the making of an automobile would categorize as an
intermediate good.
GDP might be calculated at market prices (includes sales tax paid by consumer as part of the
final price) or at factor cost (excludes sales tax). If there is no sales tax, the two measures
collapse to the same thing.
Net Domestic Product (NDP):
Net domestic product (NDP) is obtained by subtracting depreciation from GDP. Depreciation is
the reduction in the value of a capital good due to the wear and tear caused during production.
90
Table of Contents:
  1. INTRODUCTION TO ECONOMICS:Economic Systems
  2. INTRODUCTION TO ECONOMICS (CONTINUED………):Opportunity Cost
  3. DEMAND, SUPPLY AND EQUILIBRIUM:Goods Market and Factors Market
  4. DEMAND, SUPPLY AND EQUILIBRIUM (CONTINUED……..)
  5. DEMAND, SUPPLY AND EQUILIBRIUM (CONTINUED……..):Equilibrium
  6. ELASTICITIES:Price Elasticity of Demand, Point Elasticity, Arc Elasticity
  7. ELASTICITIES (CONTINUED………….):Total revenue and Elasticity
  8. ELASTICITIES (CONTINUED………….):Short Run and Long Run, Incidence of Taxation
  9. BACKGROUND TO DEMAND/CONSUMPTION:CONSUMER BEHAVIOR
  10. BACKGROUND TO DEMAND/CONSUMPTION (CONTINUED…………….)
  11. BACKGROUND TO DEMAND/CONSUMPTION (CONTINUED…………….)The Indifference Curve Approach
  12. BACKGROUND TO DEMAND/CONSUMPTION (CONTINUED…………….):Normal Goods and Giffen Good
  13. BACKGROUND TO SUPPLY/COSTS:PRODUCTIVE THEORY
  14. BACKGROUND TO SUPPLY/COSTS (CONTINUED…………..):The Scale of Production
  15. BACKGROUND TO SUPPLY/COSTS (CONTINUED…………..):Isoquant
  16. BACKGROUND TO SUPPLY/COSTS (CONTINUED…………..):COSTS
  17. BACKGROUND TO SUPPLY/COSTS (CONTINUED…………..):REVENUES
  18. BACKGROUND TO SUPPLY/COSTS (CONTINUED…………..):PROFIT MAXIMISATION
  19. MARKET STRUCTURES:PERFECT COMPETITION, Allocative efficiency
  20. MARKET STRUCTURES (CONTINUED………..):MONOPOLY
  21. MARKET STRUCTURES (CONTINUED………..):PRICE DISCRIMINATION
  22. MARKET STRUCTURES (CONTINUED………..):OLIGOPOLY
  23. SELECTED ISSUES IN MICROECONOMICS:WELFARE ECONOMICS
  24. SELECTED ISSUES IN MICROECONOMICS (CONTINUED……………)
  25. INTRODUCTION TO MACROECONOMICS:Price Level and its Effects:
  26. INTRODUCTION TO MACROECONOMICS (CONTINUED………..)
  27. INTRODUCTION TO MACROECONOMICS (CONTINUED………..):The Monetarist School
  28. THE USE OF MACROECONOMIC DATA, AND THE DEFINITION AND ACCOUNTING OF NATIONAL INCOME
  29. THE USE OF MACROECONOMIC DATA, AND THE DEFINITION AND ACCOUNTING OF NATIONAL INCOME (CONTINUED……………..)
  30. MACROECONOMIC EQUILIBRIUM & VARIABLES; THE DETERMINATION OF EQUILIBRIUM INCOME
  31. MACROECONOMIC EQUILIBRIUM & VARIABLES; THE DETERMINATION OF EQUILIBRIUM INCOME (CONTINUED………..)
  32. MACROECONOMIC EQUILIBRIUM & VARIABLES; THE DETERMINATION OF EQUILIBRIUM INCOME (CONTINUED………..):The Accelerator
  33. THE FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC ISSUES AND THEIR INTER-RELATIONSHIPS
  34. THE FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC ISSUES AND THEIR INTER-RELATIONSHIPS (CONTINUED…….)
  35. THE FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC ISSUES AND THEIR INTER-RELATIONSHIPS (CONTINUED…….):Causes of Inflation
  36. THE FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC ISSUES AND THEIR INTER-RELATIONSHIPS (CONTINUED…….):BALANCE OF PAYMENTS
  37. THE FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC ISSUES AND THEIR INTER-RELATIONSHIPS (CONTINUED…….):GROWTH
  38. THE FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC ISSUES AND THEIR INTER-RELATIONSHIPS (CONTINUED…….):Land
  39. THE FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC ISSUES AND THEIR INTER-RELATIONSHIPS (CONTINUED…….):Growth-inflation
  40. FISCAL POLICY AND TAXATION:Budget Deficit, Budget Surplus and Balanced Budget
  41. MONEY, CENTRAL BANKING AND MONETARY POLICY
  42. MONEY, CENTRAL BANKING AND MONETARY POLICY (CONTINUED…….)
  43. JOINT EQUILIBRIUM IN THE MONEY AND GOODS MARKETS: THE IS-LM FRAMEWORK
  44. AN INTRODUCTION TO INTERNATIONAL TRADE AND FINANCE
  45. PROBLEMS OF LOWER INCOME COUNTRIES:Poverty trap theories: